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Lady Victoria Manners


Victoria Harriet Marjorie Paget, Marchioness of Anglesey (née Lady Victoria Harriet Marjorie Manners) (20 December 1883 – 3 November 1946) was a British writer on art, an illustrator, and a member of the peerage.

Lady Victoria was the oldest daughter of Henry Manners, 8th Duke of Rutland, a British peer, and Violet Manners, Duchess of Rutland, an artist. Her brother John was an art expert who became the 9th Duke of Rutland, and her sister Diana was an actor, author, and socialite.

In 1920, she coauthored (with art historian G.C. Williamson) a study of the neoclassical painter Johan Zoffany that is considered the first in-depth study of the artist. Johan Zoffany, R. A.: His Life and Works 1735-1810 was published in a limited edition of 500 copies, privately printed.

She and Williamson also cowrote a study of the painter Angelica Kauffmann, one of only two women artists who were founding members of the Royal Academy of Arts (RA). Angelica Kauffmann, R.A.: Her Life and Her Works (1924) was prompted by the discovery in the RA archives of a manuscript in Kauffmann's handwriting, written in Italian and previously untranslated, which gives an account of Kauffmann's paintings post-1781. Manners and Williamson wrote that this enabled them to "come to certain definite conclusions regarding many pictures hitherto ascribed to other artists." They included numerous reproductions in both color and black-and-white on the grounds that prior books on Kauffman had presented inadequate reproductions of her paintings.

Among her other books is one on the portrait and genre painter William Peters. She also wrote articles on art for magazines like The Conoisseur.

Manners illustrated Alicia Amherst's London Parks and Gardens (1907), which is considered the first serious and deeply informed book on London's open spaces.


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